All The Ends Of The Earth
Gonville and Caius College Choir, Cambridge
directed: Geoffrey Webber
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"This fine disc ... fascinating stuff"
Classic FM Magazine |
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"One or two surprisingly mature voices step out for solos from
this young choir, and the blend and tuning are generally of a very
high standard"
Choir and Organ |
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" ... devices that both exploit and push the boundaries of vocal/choral
technique ... The Choir of Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge is
impressively at home in this consummately difficult repertoire ... I'm happy to
have heard it and certainly will remember the music in future encounters with
such ever-intriguing composers"
ClassicsToday.com |
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Classic FM Magazine ***
This fine disc, which spans a millennium of choral composition,
intensifies the shock of the old and the beauty of the new. Works by
long-dead Englishmen interlock here with pristine a cappella miniatures by
eight living Brits, clearly rehearsed to perfection by Geoffrey Webber and
sensitively performed by his young Cambridge choristers. Judith Weir's All
the Ends of the Earth and Bayan Northcott's two motets, for example,
present strikingly different, yet successful contemporary 'neo-medieval'
approaches. Fascinating stuff."
Andrew Stewart
Choir and Organ ***
The fashion for programming medieval music with contemporary pieces
continues with this recording from the Oxbridge college with arguably the
best female top line. One or two surprisingly mature voices step out for
solos from this young choir, and the blend and tuning are generally of a
very high standard. My only grumble with this technically accomplished
disc is the lack of emotional involvement with the notes on the page, that
often leads these two traditionally impenetrable musical periods to be
grouped together.
Caroline Gill
ClassicsToday.com
Although this won't be for everyone, the music on this program offers
an unusual opportunity to hear what some of today's most capable and
interesting choral composers are up to. Many of the works were written
within the last five or six years, and in keeping with the
"theme" of the program, each of the new compositions has some
connection to medieval forms and styles, be it structural, harmonic,
melodic, textual, or some combination. And while these connections are
plain to the ear, ultimately the compositional techniques--the harmonic
language in particular--are decidedly modern, so that even the completely
tonal works indulge heavily in dissonance, cluster effects, complex
rhythms within and among voices, and textural and timbral devices that
both exploit and push the boundaries of vocal/choral technique.
There's nothing strikingly innovative here, but there are some engaging
and memorable pieces, beginning with Judith Weir's All the Ends of the
Earth, a remarkable study in color and texture based on an early
13th-century organum by Perotin that somehow conveys an atmosphere of
distant time and place and mystic, celebratory ritual. Likewise Bayan
Northcott's Salve Regina arises directly from medieval chant yet unfolds
in a weirdly twisted melodic direction, controlled by quirky rhythms and
set to stark harmony just short of grotesque. Another highlight is Gabriel
Jackson's Thomas, Jewel of Canterbury, a setting of a text from a
14th-century composition that uses a wide variety of choral effects and
fancy rhythmic embellishments, along with drones and slides, to meld the
ancient with modern.
The Choir of Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge is impressively at
home in this consummately difficult repertoire, making as good a case for
both the original medieval works and the modern ones as we could wish for.
Even better is how the choir brings these centuries-apart works together
into a coherent and sensible program. I may not be putting this into my CD
player that often, but I'm happy to have heard it and certainly will
remember the music in future encounters with such ever-intriguing
composers such as Judith Weir, Robin Holloway, and Gabriel Jackson.
David Vernier
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